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  1. Kumārila.Daniel Arnold - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • The Peacock's egg: Bhartrhari on language and reality.Johannes Bronkhorst - 2001 - Philosophy East and West 51 (4):474-491.
    Bhartṛhari was not only a clever and well-informed philosopher but also a conservative Brahmin who maintained his own tradition's superiority against the philosophies developed in his time. He exploited a problem that occupied all his philosophical contemporaries to promote his own ideas, in which the Veda played a central role. Bhartṛhari and his thought are situated in their intellectual context. As it turns out, he dealt with issues that others had dealt with before him in India and suggested solutions to (...)
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  • On Śālikanātha’s Critique of Īśvara and the Notions of God.Alfred X. Ye - 2021 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 49 (3):451-465.
    The arguments against the existence of Īśvara that are advanced by Śālikanātha’s Prakaraṇapañcikā are quite peculiar and cryptic, due to both the idiosyncratic nature and opaque style of Śālikanātha’s writing. This has contributed to the difficulty in identifying the actual nature of the views that Śālikanātha opposes. This article analyses the framework by which Śālikanātha interrogates the concept of Īśvara and discusses the possible sources of his arguments. It shows, contrary to the conclusions of past scholarship, that considerations of both (...)
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  • Some Uses of Dharma in Classical Indian Philosophy.Johannes Bronkhorst - 2004 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 32 (5-6):733-750.
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  • The Argumentative Value of Āgamic Quotations in the Sphoṭasiddhi by Bharata Miśra.Alexis Pinchard - 2011 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 39 (4-5):461-477.
    In a rare book published in Trivandrum (1927), entitled Sphoṭasiddhiḥ Bharatamiśrapranītā , we find an interesting argument in defense of sphoṭa -theory, based on āgamic quotations, especially RV X, 71, 4 (the stanza where the poet describes his own activity in perceiving the essence of Speech as like a beloved woman naked). The main idea is that the numerous word sphoṭas , as an atemporal multiplicity, free from any sensuous quality, were the objects of the Ṛṣis’ primordial intuition. So the (...)
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  • Sanskrit and reality: the Buddhist contribution.Bronkhorst Johannes - unknown
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  • The origin of Mimamsa as a school of thought: a hypothesis.Bronkhorst Johannes - unknown
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